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The development and initial validation of a telephone‐administered cognitive test battery (TACT)
Author(s) -
Prince Martin J.,
Macdonald Alison M.,
Sham Pak C.,
Richards Marcus,
Quraishi Seema,
Horn Isobel
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
international journal of methods in psychiatric research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.275
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1557-0657
pISSN - 1049-8931
DOI - 10.1002/mpr.56
Subject(s) - tact , psychology , fluid and crystallized intelligence , test (biology) , cognition , logical address , verbal fluency test , telephone interview , cognitive test , developmental psychology , gerontology , applied psychology , medicine , neuropsychology , psychiatry , computer science , working memory , paleontology , social science , fluid intelligence , physical address , sociology , biology , programming language , overlay
Telephone interviews are increasingly recognized as a convenient assessment tool for epidemiological studies with geographically scattered samples, particularly where repeated assessments are to be made. We have compiled a telephone‐administered cognitive test battery (TACT) that aims to be sensitive enough to detect small but important degrees of early decline in cognitive function. The telephone‐administered cognitive test battery comprises tests of crystallized intelligence, logical memory, visuo‐spatial function, verbal fluency, and inductive reasoning. It incorporates a brief telephone assessment of cognitive status, the modified Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS‐m), already validated as a screening test for dementia. We carried out a preliminary pilot study on 98 volunteer twin subjects. The test was generally administered in less than 30 minutes. Most component test scores were normally distributed with no evidence of ceiling or floor effects. We tested for the effects of age and education, and estimated test–retest reliability. A second‐order factor analysis suggested that TACT measured three dimensions of cognitive function (1) logical memory, (2) crystallized intelligence and (3) the ability to learn and apply rules to abstract material under pressure of time. The last of these dimensions was the most influenced by age. The TACT is a convenient and efficient, yet comprehensive and demanding, measure of cognitive status with wide‐ranging applications in gerontological epidemiology, genetic epidemiology and health service evaluative research. Copyright © 1999 Whurr Publishers, Ltd.

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